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Historic Capital at Meripustak

Historic Capital by Cameron Logan, UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS

Books from same Author: Cameron Logan

Books from same Publisher: UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Cameron Logan
    PublisherUNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS
    ISBN9780816692347
    Pages304
    BindingPaperback with Sewin
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearDecember 2017

    Description

    UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS Historic Capital by Cameron Logan

    Washington, D.C. has long been known as a frustrating and sometimes confusing city for its residents to call home. The monumental core of federal office buildings, museums, and the National Mall dominates the city's surrounding neighborhoods and urban fabric. For much of the postwar era, Washingtonians battled to make the city their own, fighting the federal government over the basic question of home rule, the right of the city's residents to govern their local affairs. In Historic Capital, urban historian Cameron Logan examines how the historic preservation movement played an integral role in Washingtonians' claiming the city as their own. Going back to the earliest days of the local historic preservation movement in the 1920s, Logan shows how Washington, D.C.'s historic buildings and neighborhoods have been a site of contestation between local interests and the expansion of the federal government's footprint. He carefully analyzes the long history of fights over the right to name and define historic districts in Georgetown, Dupont Circle, and Capitol Hill and documents a series of high-profile conflicts surrounding the fate of Lafayette Square, Rhodes Tavern, and Capitol Park, SW before discussing D.C. today.Diving deep into the racial fault lines of D.C., Historic Capital also explores how the historic preservation movement affected poor and African American residents in Anacostia and the U Street and Shaw neighborhoods and changed the social and cultural fabric of the nation's capital. Broadening his inquiry to the United States as a whole, Logan ultimately makes the provocative and compelling case that historic preservation has had as great an impact on the physical fabric of U.S. cities as any other private or public sector initiative in the twentieth century. ContentsIntroduction: From "Life Inside a Monument" to Neighborhoodswith Life1. Value: Property, History and Homeliness in Georgetown2. Taste: Architectural Complexity and Social Diversity in the 1960s3. The White House and Its Neighborhood: Federal City Making and Local Preservation, 1960-19754. Race and Resistance: Gentrification and the Critique of Historic Preservation5. Whose Neighborhood? Whose History? Expanding Dupont Circle, 1975-19856. Rhodes Tavern and the Problem with Preservation in the 1980s7. Modernist Urbanism as History: Preserving the Southwest Urban Renewal Area Conclusion: Preservation, Profits and LossAcknowledgmentsNotesIndex



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